WO2001051924A2 - Method for determining the response to cancer therapy - Google Patents

Method for determining the response to cancer therapy Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2001051924A2
WO2001051924A2 PCT/US2001/001113 US0101113W WO0151924A2 WO 2001051924 A2 WO2001051924 A2 WO 2001051924A2 US 0101113 W US0101113 W US 0101113W WO 0151924 A2 WO0151924 A2 WO 0151924A2
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cells
chemotherapeutic
individual
senescence
tissue
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PCT/US2001/001113
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French (fr)
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WO2001051924A3 (en
Inventor
Sarah S. Bacus
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Ventana Medical Systems, Inc.
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Priority to JP2001552086A priority Critical patent/JP3699399B2/en
Priority to EP01902043A priority patent/EP1247097B1/en
Priority to MXPA02006778A priority patent/MXPA02006778A/en
Priority to CA002397772A priority patent/CA2397772C/en
Priority to DE60104392T priority patent/DE60104392T2/en
Priority to AT01902043T priority patent/ATE271691T1/en
Priority to AU27887/01A priority patent/AU785347B2/en
Publication of WO2001051924A2 publication Critical patent/WO2001051924A2/en
Publication of WO2001051924A3 publication Critical patent/WO2001051924A3/en

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    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/53Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor
    • G01N33/574Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor for cancer
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/5005Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells
    • G01N33/5008Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells for testing or evaluating the effect of chemical or biological compounds, e.g. drugs, cosmetics
    • G01N33/5011Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells for testing or evaluating the effect of chemical or biological compounds, e.g. drugs, cosmetics for testing antineoplastic activity
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/53Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor
    • G01N33/574Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor for cancer
    • G01N33/57484Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor for cancer involving compounds serving as markers for tumor, cancer, neoplasia, e.g. cellular determinants, receptors, heat shock/stress proteins, A-protein, oligosaccharides, metabolites
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N2333/00Assays involving biological materials from specific organisms or of a specific nature
    • G01N2333/435Assays involving biological materials from specific organisms or of a specific nature from animals; from humans
    • G01N2333/475Assays involving growth factors
    • G01N2333/495Transforming growth factor [TGF]
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N2333/00Assays involving biological materials from specific organisms or of a specific nature
    • G01N2333/82Translation products from oncogenes
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N2800/00Detection or diagnosis of diseases
    • G01N2800/52Predicting or monitoring the response to treatment, e.g. for selection of therapy based on assay results in personalised medicine; Prognosis
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T436/00Chemistry: analytical and immunological testing
    • Y10T436/10Composition for standardization, calibration, simulation, stabilization, preparation or preservation; processes of use in preparation for chemical testing
    • Y10T436/101666Particle count or volume standard or control [e.g., platelet count standards, etc.]
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T436/00Chemistry: analytical and immunological testing
    • Y10T436/10Composition for standardization, calibration, simulation, stabilization, preparation or preservation; processes of use in preparation for chemical testing
    • Y10T436/105831Protein or peptide standard or control [e.g., hemoglobin, etc.]
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T436/00Chemistry: analytical and immunological testing
    • Y10T436/13Tracers or tags

Definitions

  • the invention relates to methods for determining or predicting response to cancer therapy in an individual
  • the invention relates to methods for using image analysis to assess the efficacy of chemotherapeutic and chemopreventative agents in a human in need of treatment with such agents by detecting expression levels of biological makeis associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation
  • the mvention provides methods where the amount of the senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation marker is quantitated in tissue and cell samples removed from an individual before and after exposure to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventative agent
  • a primary goal of cancer therapy is to selectively kill or inhibit the uncontrolled growth of malignant cells while not adversely affecting normal cells
  • Traditional chemotherapeutic agents are highly cytotoxic agents that preferably have greater affinity for malignant cells than for normal cells, or at least preferentially affect malignant cells based on their high rate of metabolic activity However, these agents often harm normal cells
  • anticancer drugs, monoclonal antibodies, or chemopreventive agents growth arrest, terminal differentiation and cell death of the cancerous or precancerous cells is intended (Mendelsohn, 1990, Semin Cancer Bwl 1 339-44, Hancock et al , 1991, Cancel Res 51 4575-80, Arteaga et al , 1994, Cancer Res , 54 3758-65, Pietras et al , 1994, Oncogene 9 1829-38, Bacus et al , 1997, Anal Quant Cytol Histol 19 316-28, Bacus et al . 1999, Breast f
  • chemotherapeutic drugs can be administered at doses high enough to bring about cell death, such doses typically produce deleterious effects on normal as well as tumor cells. Differentiating agents, and lower doses of chemotherapeutic drugs and agents frequently results in growth arrest rather than cell death; such arrest can be followed by apoptosis and sell death, or continued proliferation once the chemotherapeutic drugs are withdrawn.
  • Administration of cytotoxic and chemotherapeutic drugs or ionizing radiation may also induce transient growth arrest, a state which depends largely on the function of p53 and a p53-regulated cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (such as pi 6, p27, and pi 9) or growth inhibitors (such as TGF- ⁇ , IL-4, and IL-6).
  • Upon removal of the chemotherapeutic drug cells subjected to the drug treatment will eventually resume division and either continue to proliferate or die. Some drug-treated tumor cells undergo prolonged growth arrest and fail to resume cell division upon release from the drug.
  • terminal proliferation arrest may result from terminal differentiation or replicative senescence.
  • Senescence is a physiological process that limits the proliferative span of normal cells.
  • a commonly-used marker of senescence in human cells is expression of senescence-associated ⁇ -galactosidase (SA- ⁇ -Gal). This protein has been shown to correlate with senescence in aging cell cultures in vitro and with cells in vivo.
  • Terminal proliferation arrest in normal cells can be rapidly induced by treatment with DNA-damaging drugs or ⁇ -irradiation and is accompanied by the morphological features of senescence and the induction of SA- ⁇ -Gal. Accelerated senescence is likely to be a protective response of cells to carcinogenic impact.
  • Tumor cells appear to have retained the ability to enter senescence and terminal proliferation arrest.
  • Treatment of tumor cells with different classes of agents that affect cell differentiation, and anticancer agents readily induces morphological, enzymatic, and other changes characteristic of senescence (such as the up-regulation of p53, p21, p27, pl6, TGF- ⁇ , IL-4, IL-6, and SA- ⁇ -Gal).
  • This senescence-like phenotype (SLP) distinguishes cells that will become stably growth-arrested from cells that will recover from drug exposure and continue to proliferate.
  • SLP senescence-like phenotype
  • Apoptosis is generally regarded as an active suicidal response to various physiological or pathological stimuli.
  • DNA-damaging agents including X-ray irradiation and several chemotherapeutic drugs (e.g., alkylating agents and topoisomerase II inhibitors) cause necrosis or initiate pathways leading to apoptosis.
  • chemotherapeutic drugs e.g., alkylating agents and topoisomerase II inhibitors
  • DNA-damaging stimuli can result in an elevation of intracellular p53 protein levels. Increased levels of wild-type p53, in turn, inhibit the cell cycle at Gi, thus permitting the damaged cell to undergo DNA repair. However, if the damaged cell is unable to undergo DNA repair, p53 can trigger programmed cell death. It is this ability to trigger programmed cell death that contributes to the induction of tumor cell death following exposure to chemotherapeutic agents.
  • Increased levels of p53 can also lead to the activation of a number of genes that contain wild-type p53-binding sequences, including the MDM-2 oncogene, Bax, and the
  • WAFl/CIPl gene encodes a protein having a M r of 21,000 that associates with cyclin-Cdk complexes and is capable of inhibiting kinase activity associated with these complexes.
  • a major target of WAF (p21 or CIP) inhibition is the cyclin E-Cdk2 kinase complex whose activity is required for Go to S phase cell cycle progression.
  • the WAF1/CIP1 gene is transcriptionally activated in response to DNA-damaging agents that trigger Gi arrest or apoptosis in cells with wild-type p53 but not in tumor cells harboring deletions or mutations of the p53 gene.
  • WAF1/CIP1 has also been shown to be up- regulated in cells undergoing differentiation or cell cycle arrest by a p53 -independent mechanism.
  • markers of senescence, apoptosis and terminal proliferative arrest that can be used to detect the effects of chemotherapeutic and chemopreventative drugs and agents. These markers can be used to assess the success or failure of any particular chemotherapeutic or chemopreventative drug or agent, or combination thereof, to affect an anticancer effect on tumor cells in vivo.
  • neoadjuvant (or primary) chemotherapy consists of administering drugs as an initial treatment in cancer patients.
  • One advantage of such an approach is that, in primary tumors of more than 3 cm this approach permits the use of conservative surgical procedures (as opposed to, e.g., mastectomy in breast cancer patients) in the majority of patients.
  • Another advantage is that for many cancers, a partial and/or complete response is achieved in about two-thirds of all cases.
  • the present invention provides methods for determining the response to cancer therapy in an individual
  • the invention specifically provides methods for assessing efficacy of chemotherapeutic and chemopreventative agents in a human m need of treatment with such agents by detecting expression levels of biological makers associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation
  • the amount of one or a plurality of senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation markers is quantitated in tissue and cell samples removed from an individual before and after exposure to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventative agent
  • the amount of said marker is determined using image analysis of lmmunohistochemically-stamed tissue or cell samples obtained from a patient tumor
  • response to a chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent in an individual is determined by collecting a first tissue or cell sample from the individual before exposing the individual to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent, collecting a second tissue or cell sample from the individual after exposing the individual to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent, immunohistochemically staining the first and second tissue or cell samples using a detectably-labeled antibody directed against a biological marker associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation, determining the amount of the marker in the first and second tissue or cell samples, and determining whether expression of the biological marker associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation was increased following exposure to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent
  • the detectable label is a chromagen or a fluorophore
  • FIGS 1A-1B show the results of analysis of MCF7 cells that were not treated (A) or treated
  • FIGs 2A-2C show the results of flow cytomet ⁇ c analysis of MCF7 cells untreated (A) or treated (B) with doxorubicm, or treated with Taxol (C)
  • Figures 3A-3C illustrate the results of an analysis of a tumor sample removed from an individual following treatment with HerceptmTM (an antibody to the oncogene protein HER- llneu) Tumor tissue was stained with either Hemotoxin and Eosin (A), SA- ⁇ -Gal (24 hours after treatment with HerceptmTM, C), or SA- ⁇ -Gal 14 days after treatment with HerceptmTM
  • HerceptmTM an antibody to the oncogene protein HER- llneu
  • the methods of the present invention are useful for determining the response to cancer therapy in an individual Specifically, the present invention provides methods for assessing the efficacy of treating an individual m need of such treatment with a chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent, m which the level of expression of a biological marker associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation is quantitated in lmmunohistochemically-stamed tissue or cell samples removed from the individual before and after exposure to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent
  • expression levels are quantitated using computer-aided image analysis system
  • response to a chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent in an individual is determined by collecting a first tissue or cell sample from the individual before exposing the individual to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent, collecting a second tissue or cell sample from the individual after exposing the individual to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent, immunohistochemically staining the first and second tissue or cell samples using a detectably-labeled antibody directed against a biological marker associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation, determining amount of expression of one or a plurality of biological markers associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation in the first and second tissue or cell samples, and determining whether expression of the biological marker(s) associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation was increased following exposure to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent
  • biological markers whose expression is induced or increases in cellular senescence, apoptosis and terminal differentiation may include but are not limited to p21, p27, pi 6, TGF- ⁇ , IL-4, IL-6, and SA- ⁇ -Gal, generally and collectively known as the senescence-like phenotype (SLP)
  • SLP senescence-like phenotype
  • This senescence-like phenotype (SLP) can be used to distinguish cells with rest ⁇ cted proliferative potential from those that continue to proliferate after drug exposure, suggesting that senescence-like terminal proliferation arrest is an important determinant of treatment response in human cancer
  • both SA- ⁇ -Gal + cells and SA- ⁇ -Gal cells have a similar probability of undergoing mitotic death during drug treatment or withm days following release from the drug
  • SLP can be used to distinguish growth-retarded and non-clonogemc cells from recovering and proliferating cells
  • the overall outcome of treatment with chemopreventive or chemotherapeutic drugs is therefore determined by a combination of factors responsible for the induction of cell death (mitotic cell death or apoptosis) and senescence-like terminal proliferation arrest
  • SLP induction may be the p ⁇ mary determinant of treatment outcome for cytostatic differentiating agents such as retinoids, and other chemopreventive agents
  • image analysis may be used to examine therapeutic response by quantitating the expression of proteins that are involved in activated pathways (e g , phosphorylated MAP kinase and Akt) in tissues before and after treatment w ith kinase inhibitors
  • SLP markers such as ⁇ -Gal. p53, and p21 in clinical cancer may provide an important diagnostic approach for momto ⁇ ng tumor response to different forms of therapy and can be done by calibrated staining for ⁇ anous factors associated with senescence and quantified by microscope based image analysis
  • cells are removed from an individual before and after treatment with a putative anti-cancer agent and the cells are fixed using, e g , paraformaldehvde Cell samples are then treated with an organic solvent, such as acetone, formalin, or methanol, to render the cells permeable for immunohistological staining
  • an organic solvent such as acetone, formalin, or methanol
  • antibodies and other molecules that specifically bind to these target proteins are known m the art, and the methods of the present invention can be practiced using any antibody or other molecule or collection of molecules that specifically binds to any of said biological markers of senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation
  • Exemplary p ⁇ mary antibodies that bind to p53, p21, and pl6 include the monoclonal antibody Ab-2 (Oncogene Sciences, Cambridge, MA)
  • exemplary antibodies that bind to p21 protein include the monoclonal antibody Ab-1 (Oncogene Sciences)
  • An exemplary secondary antibody that may be used with either of these p ⁇ mary antibodies is rabbit anti-mouse IgG (Jackson Labs, West Grove, PA)
  • an enzyme complex such as ABC complex (Vector Labs, Burlington, CA) is added to complete the antibody sandwich system and render it amenable to staining and counterstammg Image analysis techniques are used to complete the quantitation
  • a suitable p ⁇ mary antibody such as Ab-2 for p53, or Ab-1 for WAF1, HSP60, or caspase 3
  • secondary antibody such as rabbit anti-mouse IgG
  • tertiary ABC complex Tertiary ABC complexes are visualized by treating the sections with diaminobemzidme (DAB) stain under approp ⁇ ate conditions
  • DAB diaminobemzidme
  • the tissue is counterstained with another optical enhancement factor, preferably ethyl green
  • the resulting preparation has green nuclei with varying degrees of brown diammobenzidme (DAB) precipitate localized to the nuclei (and indicating the level of expression of p53, p21, pl6, WAF1 , HSP60, or caspase-3 protein)
  • DAB brown diammobenzidme
  • an interactive threshold setting technique can be used in which an operator visualizing the images can set a boundary on the areas under consideration When the boundaries are set, the images are formed by eliminating all parts of the image that are below the threshold in optical density A threshold is set for the first image, and a second threshold is set for the second image
  • the image processing method then consists of first forming the mask image of the tissues under consideration with the red filter
  • This mask image is stored and another image for expressed protein quantification is then acquired by using the green filtered version of the same image
  • Using the filters m combination allows for the optical enhancement of those areas of the tissue mask where tissue components are stained with DAB (which are darkened) and those tissue components having only the green counterstam (which are lightened)
  • An image analysis can then be performed using only those areas of the image that are stained and which are withm the mask
  • the amount of target protein is then quantitated by statistical analysis of the differences between the two images
  • the proportion or percentage of total tissue area stained may be readily calculated, as the area stained above an antibody threshold level in the second image
  • Red and green filters are suitable for practice of the invention
  • a green filter (500 ran) is used to determine the total cytoplasmic area stained with red eosin and compared with the blue area stained for SA- ⁇ -Gal (600 run) as determined using a red filter
  • This implementation shows
  • the percentage of such cells in tissue derived from patients after treatment may be compared to the percentage of such cells in untreated tissue
  • the potential effectiveness of a putative therapeutic or chemopreventive agent against the cancer may be determined Specifically, if there is a greater percentage of cells expressing p53, WAF1, SA- ⁇ -Gal, HSP60, or caspase 3 in the treated portion of the sample than there is in the untreated portion of the sample, then the therapeutic agent used in the treatment will be predicted to be potentially an effective agent for treating the cancer Conversely, if there is a substantially equal percentage of cells expressing SA- ⁇ -Gal, p53, WAF1, HSP60, or caspase 3 in both the treated and untreated portions of the sample, or there is less protein expression in the treated portion of the sample, then the putative therapeutic agent will not be predicted to be effective for treatment of the cancer
  • Taxol-induced apoptosis is evident by the hypodiploid peak in the flow cytometry histogram, whereas doxorubicin treatment (and treatment with the monoclonal antibody HerceptinTM) resulted in senescence and blocks at G- , G 2 , and G 2 M as seen in SA- ⁇ -Gal + cells having the morphological features of senescence ( Figures 2A-2C and Tables I and II).
  • SA- ⁇ - Gaf cells were quantitated using bright-field microscopy and image analysis. Tissues were obtained from a patient receiving only HerceptinTM. The first needle biopsy was obtained from the metastatic disease before initiation of HerceptinTM therapy. On day 1 the patient received 4mg/lg.v HerceptinTM for 10 minutes. A second biopsy was taken on day 2, 24 hours after the patient received a second HerceptinTM treatment. A third biopsy was taken on day 14, 24 hours after the patient received a third dose of HerceptinTM. The results of SA- ⁇ - Gal quantitation are shown in Figures 3A-3C and Table II.
  • EXAMPLE 5 Quantitation of p21 W ⁇ F1 Expression Following Treatment with Doxorubicin MCF7 cells were treated for 3 days with doxorubicin and then stained for p53 and p2j Cip ⁇ / w AFi eX p ress i on Cells were cultured, stained, and analyzed as described above for SA- ⁇ -Gal using appropriate antibodies. The results of p53 and p2i CIP1/WAF1 quantitation are shown in Table III.

Abstract

The invention relates to a method for determining the response to cancer therapy in an individual using image analysis.

Description

METHOD FOR DETERMINING THE RESPONSE TO CANCER THERAPY
This application is a continuation of U S Provisional Patent Application Nos 60/176.514 and 60/176,515, each filed on January 12, 2000, the disclosure of each of which is explicitly incorporated by reference herein
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention The invention relates to methods for determining or predicting response to cancer therapy in an individual In particular, the invention relates to methods for using image analysis to assess the efficacy of chemotherapeutic and chemopreventative agents in a human in need of treatment with such agents by detecting expression levels of biological makeis associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation More specifically, the mvention provides methods where the amount of the senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation marker is quantitated in tissue and cell samples removed from an individual before and after exposure to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventative agent
2. Background of the Invention A primary goal of cancer therapy is to selectively kill or inhibit the uncontrolled growth of malignant cells while not adversely affecting normal cells Traditional chemotherapeutic agents are highly cytotoxic agents that preferably have greater affinity for malignant cells than for normal cells, or at least preferentially affect malignant cells based on their high rate of metabolic activity However, these agents often harm normal cells In the use of anticancer drugs, monoclonal antibodies, or chemopreventive agents, growth arrest, terminal differentiation and cell death of the cancerous or precancerous cells is intended (Mendelsohn, 1990, Semin Cancer Bwl 1 339-44, Hancock et al , 1991, Cancel Res 51 4575-80, Arteaga et al , 1994, Cancer Res , 54 3758-65, Pietras et al , 1994, Oncogene 9 1829-38, Bacus et al , 1997, Anal Quant Cytol Histol 19 316-28, Bacus et al . 1999, Breast f , Baselga et al , 1999, Proceedings of AACR NCI EORTC International
Conference, Abstract 98, Cobleigh et al , 1999, J Clin Oncol 17 2639-48, DiGiovanna, 1999, PPO Updates Princ Practice Oncol 13 1-9, Hortobagyi, 1999, J Clin Oncol 17 25- 29, Shak, 1999, Semin Oncol 26 71-77, Shwkowski et al , 1999, Semin Oncol 26 60-70, Vincent et al , 2000, Cancer Chemother Pharmacol 45 231-38) Drug-induced growth arrest or cell death is often characterized by morphological and biochemical changes associated with programmed cell death or terminal differentiation (as opposed to mitotic cell death).
Although chemotherapeutic drugs can be administered at doses high enough to bring about cell death, such doses typically produce deleterious effects on normal as well as tumor cells. Differentiating agents, and lower doses of chemotherapeutic drugs and agents frequently results in growth arrest rather than cell death; such arrest can be followed by apoptosis and sell death, or continued proliferation once the chemotherapeutic drugs are withdrawn. Administration of cytotoxic and chemotherapeutic drugs or ionizing radiation may also induce transient growth arrest, a state which depends largely on the function of p53 and a p53-regulated cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (such as pi 6, p27, and pi 9) or growth inhibitors (such as TGF-β, IL-4, and IL-6). Upon removal of the chemotherapeutic drug, cells subjected to the drug treatment will eventually resume division and either continue to proliferate or die. Some drug-treated tumor cells undergo prolonged growth arrest and fail to resume cell division upon release from the drug.
In normal cells, terminal proliferation arrest may result from terminal differentiation or replicative senescence. Senescence is a physiological process that limits the proliferative span of normal cells. A commonly-used marker of senescence in human cells is expression of senescence-associated β-galactosidase (SA-β-Gal). This protein has been shown to correlate with senescence in aging cell cultures in vitro and with cells in vivo. Terminal proliferation arrest in normal cells can be rapidly induced by treatment with DNA-damaging drugs or γ-irradiation and is accompanied by the morphological features of senescence and the induction of SA-β-Gal. Accelerated senescence is likely to be a protective response of cells to carcinogenic impact. Similar to other damage responses of normal cells - such as quiescence and apoptosis - senescence-like terminal proliferation arrest involves the function of proteins such as wild-type p53 and the up-regulation of such proteins as p21WAF1, pl6, pi 9, and p27 (Kwok and Sutherland, 1989, J. Natl. Cancer Inst. 81 :1020-24; Kwok and Sutherland, 1991, Int. J. Cancer 49:73-76; Kastan et al., 1991, Cancer Res. 51 :6304-11 ; Lane, 1992, Nature 358: 15-16; Kuerbitz et al., 1992, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 89:7491- 95; Gu et al., 1993, Nature 366:707-10; Halevy et al., 1995, Science 267: 1018-21 ; Sherr and
Roberts, 1995, Genes Dev. 9: 1 149-63; Luo et ai, 1995, Nature 375: 159-61; Dimri et al, 1995, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 92:9363-67; Bacus et al., 1996, Oncogene 12:2535-47; Liu et al., 1996, Cancer Res. 56:31-35; Wang et al., 1998, Oncogene 17: 1923-30; Chang et al, 1999, Oncogene 18:4808-18; Hong et al, 1999, Cancer Res. 59:2847-52; Sionov and Haupt, 1999, Oncogene 18:6145-57; Wouters et al, 1999, Oncogene 18:6540-45).
Tumor cells appear to have retained the ability to enter senescence and terminal proliferation arrest. Treatment of tumor cells with different classes of agents that affect cell differentiation, and anticancer agents, readily induces morphological, enzymatic, and other changes characteristic of senescence (such as the up-regulation of p53, p21, p27, pl6, TGF-β, IL-4, IL-6, and SA-β-Gal). This senescence-like phenotype (SLP) distinguishes cells that will become stably growth-arrested from cells that will recover from drug exposure and continue to proliferate. Thus, the induction of senescence-like terminal proliferation arrest provides an important determinant of treatment response in tumor cells.
Apoptosis is generally regarded as an active suicidal response to various physiological or pathological stimuli. Recent studies have shown that a variety of DNA-damaging agents, including X-ray irradiation and several chemotherapeutic drugs (e.g., alkylating agents and topoisomerase II inhibitors) cause necrosis or initiate pathways leading to apoptosis. The exact mechanism by which apoptosis is induced by these agents is not yet known. However, expression of the suppressor gene p53 has been implicated in this process (Kwok and Sutherland, 1989, J. Natl Cancer Inst. 81 : 1020-24; Kwok and Sutherland, 1991, Int. J. Cancer 49:73-76; Lane, 1992, Nature 358:15-16; Kuerbitz et al, 1992, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 89:7491-95; Luo et α/., 1995, Nature 315: \59-6\; UVL et al, 1996, Cancer Res. 56:31- 35; Mellinghoff and Sawyers, 2000, PPO Updates 14:1-1 1). In addition, the up-regulation of caspases (e.g., caspase 9 or caspase 3) or their chaperone molecules (e.g., heat shock protein 60) has been associated with apoptosis.
In cells undergoing apoptosis, DNA-damaging stimuli can result in an elevation of intracellular p53 protein levels. Increased levels of wild-type p53, in turn, inhibit the cell cycle at Gi, thus permitting the damaged cell to undergo DNA repair. However, if the damaged cell is unable to undergo DNA repair, p53 can trigger programmed cell death. It is this ability to trigger programmed cell death that contributes to the induction of tumor cell death following exposure to chemotherapeutic agents.
Increased levels of p53 can also lead to the activation of a number of genes that contain wild-type p53-binding sequences, including the MDM-2 oncogene, Bax, and the
WAFl/CIPl gene. The WAF1/CIP1 gene encodes a protein having a Mr of 21,000 that associates with cyclin-Cdk complexes and is capable of inhibiting kinase activity associated with these complexes. A major target of WAF (p21 or CIP) inhibition is the cyclin E-Cdk2 kinase complex whose activity is required for Go to S phase cell cycle progression. The WAF1/CIP1 gene is transcriptionally activated in response to DNA-damaging agents that trigger Gi arrest or apoptosis in cells with wild-type p53 but not in tumor cells harboring deletions or mutations of the p53 gene. However, WAF1/CIP1 has also been shown to be up- regulated in cells undergoing differentiation or cell cycle arrest by a p53 -independent mechanism.
Thus, there are a variety of cellular markers of senescence, apoptosis and terminal proliferative arrest that can be used to detect the effects of chemotherapeutic and chemopreventative drugs and agents. These markers can be used to assess the success or failure of any particular chemotherapeutic or chemopreventative drug or agent, or combination thereof, to affect an anticancer effect on tumor cells in vivo.
In contrast to traditional anticancer methods, where chemotherapeutic drug treatment is undertaken as an adjunct to and after surgical intervention, neoadjuvant (or primary) chemotherapy consists of administering drugs as an initial treatment in cancer patients. One advantage of such an approach is that, in primary tumors of more than 3 cm this approach permits the use of conservative surgical procedures (as opposed to, e.g., mastectomy in breast cancer patients) in the majority of patients. Another advantage is that for many cancers, a partial and/or complete response is achieved in about two-thirds of all cases. Finally, since the majority of patients are responsive after two to three cycles of chemotherapeutic treatment, it is possible to monitor the in vivo efficacy of the chemotherapeutic regimen employed, which is important for a timely identification of those cancers which are non- responsive to chemotherapeutic treatment. Timely identification of non-responsive tumors, in turn, allows the clinician to limit the cancer patient's exposure to unnecessary side-effects and institute alternative treatments. The efficacy of chemotherapeutic agents in treating particular cancers is unpredictable.
In view of this unpredictability, it has not been possible to determine, prior to starting therapy, whether one or more selected agents would be active as anti-tumor agents or to render an accurate prognosis of course of treatment in an individual patient. It would be very desirable to be able to determine the efficacy of a proposed therapeutic agent (or combination of agents) in an individual patient. There is a need in the art for a method of assessing the efficacy of chemotherapeutic programs that is both time- and cost-effective and minimally traumatic to cancer patients. SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides methods for determining the response to cancer therapy in an individual The invention specifically provides methods for assessing efficacy of chemotherapeutic and chemopreventative agents in a human m need of treatment with such agents by detecting expression levels of biological makers associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation In the inventive methods, the amount of one or a plurality of senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation markers is quantitated in tissue and cell samples removed from an individual before and after exposure to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventative agent In preferred embodiments, the amount of said marker is determined using image analysis of lmmunohistochemically-stamed tissue or cell samples obtained from a patient tumor
In one embodiment of the inventive methods, response to a chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent in an individual is determined by collecting a first tissue or cell sample from the individual before exposing the individual to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent, collecting a second tissue or cell sample from the individual after exposing the individual to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent, immunohistochemically staining the first and second tissue or cell samples using a detectably-labeled antibody directed against a biological marker associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation, determining the amount of the marker in the first and second tissue or cell samples, and determining whether expression of the biological marker associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation was increased following exposure to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent In a preferred embodiment, the detectable label is a chromagen or a fluorophore
Specific preferred embodiments of the present mvention will become evident from the following more detailed description of certain preferred embodiments and the claims
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Figures 1A-1B show the results of analysis of MCF7 cells that were not treated (A) or treated
(B) with doxorubicm, and then stained for SA-β-Gal activity,
Figures 2A-2C show the results of flow cytometπc analysis of MCF7 cells untreated (A) or treated (B) with doxorubicm, or treated with Taxol (C), Figures 3A-3C illustrate the results of an analysis of a tumor sample removed from an individual following treatment with Herceptm™ (an antibody to the oncogene protein HER- llneu) Tumor tissue was stained with either Hemotoxin and Eosin (A), SA-β-Gal (24 hours after treatment with Herceptm™, C), or SA-β-Gal 14 days after treatment with Herceptm™
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The methods of the present invention are useful for determining the response to cancer therapy in an individual Specifically, the present invention provides methods for assessing the efficacy of treating an individual m need of such treatment with a chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent, m which the level of expression of a biological marker associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation is quantitated in lmmunohistochemically-stamed tissue or cell samples removed from the individual before and after exposure to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent In preferred embodiments, expression levels are quantitated using computer-aided image analysis system
In one embodiment of the methods of this invention, response to a chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent in an individual is determined by collecting a first tissue or cell sample from the individual before exposing the individual to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent, collecting a second tissue or cell sample from the individual after exposing the individual to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent, immunohistochemically staining the first and second tissue or cell samples using a detectably-labeled antibody directed against a biological marker associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation, determining amount of expression of one or a plurality of biological markers associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation in the first and second tissue or cell samples, and determining whether expression of the biological marker(s) associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation was increased following exposure to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent
In preferred embodiments, biological markers whose expression is induced or increases in cellular senescence, apoptosis and terminal differentiation may include but are not limited to p21, p27, pi 6, TGF-β, IL-4, IL-6, and SA-β-Gal, generally and collectively known as the senescence-like phenotype (SLP) This senescence-like phenotype (SLP) can be used to distinguish cells with restπcted proliferative potential from those that continue to proliferate after drug exposure, suggesting that senescence-like terminal proliferation arrest is an important determinant of treatment response in human cancer
In cells treated with cytotoxic drugs, SLP induction and cell death appear to be concurrent and independent responses Thus, both SA-β-Gal+ cells and SA-β-Gal cells have a similar probability of undergoing mitotic death during drug treatment or withm days following release from the drug Once the rapid process of cell death is completed, however, SLP can be used to distinguish growth-retarded and non-clonogemc cells from recovering and proliferating cells The overall outcome of treatment with chemopreventive or chemotherapeutic drugs is therefore determined by a combination of factors responsible for the induction of cell death (mitotic cell death or apoptosis) and senescence-like terminal proliferation arrest
Exposure to moderate doses of doxorubicm induces SLP However, when patients are treated with other agents, such as Taxol or Taxoter, apoptosis and up-regulation of p53 and p21 become more evident The same is true when patients are treated with Herceptm™, a monoclonal antibody to the oncogemc receptor
Figure imgf000008_0001
Thus, SLP induction may be the pπmary determinant of treatment outcome for cytostatic differentiating agents such as retinoids, and other chemopreventive agents In addition, image analysis may be used to examine therapeutic response by quantitating the expression of proteins that are involved in activated pathways (e g , phosphorylated MAP kinase and Akt) in tissues before and after treatment w ith kinase inhibitors
Analysis of SLP markers such as β-Gal. p53, and p21 in clinical cancer may provide an important diagnostic approach for momtoπng tumor response to different forms of therapy and can be done by calibrated staining for \ anous factors associated with senescence and quantified by microscope based image analysis In a specific embodiment of the methods of the present invention, cells are removed from an individual before and after treatment with a putative anti-cancer agent and the cells are fixed using, e g , paraformaldehvde Cell samples are then treated with an organic solvent, such as acetone, formalin, or methanol, to render the cells permeable for immunohistological staining Methods of fixation are known to those of skill in the art Where the presence and distribution of p53, p21, pl6, p27, or p21-WAFl protein are determined, the proteins are identified using suitable antibody systems such as sandwich systems using a pπmary antibody that specifically binds to the protein of interest and a secondary antibody that binds to the pnmary antibody The antibody system can then be visualized using suitable stams (Bacus et al . 1999, Breast J ) Generally, antibodies and other molecules that specifically bind to these target proteins are known m the art, and the methods of the present invention can be practiced using any antibody or other molecule or collection of molecules that specifically binds to any of said biological markers of senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation Exemplary pπmary antibodies that bind to p53, p21, and pl6 include the monoclonal antibody Ab-2 (Oncogene Sciences, Cambridge, MA) Similarly, exemplary antibodies that bind to p21 protein include the monoclonal antibody Ab-1 (Oncogene Sciences) An exemplary secondary antibody that may be used with either of these pπmary antibodies is rabbit anti-mouse IgG (Jackson Labs, West Grove, PA) After exposure to antibodies, an enzyme complex such as ABC complex (Vector Labs, Burlington, CA) is added to complete the antibody sandwich system and render it amenable to staining and counterstammg Image analysis techniques are used to complete the quantitation
The prefeπed embodiment of the method of the present mvention and its advantages over previously investigated methods for quantitating the response to cancer therapy are best understood by referπng to Figures 1-3 and Examples 1-6 The Examples, which follow, are illustrative of specific embodiments of the invention, and various uses thereof They are set forth for explanatory purposes only, and are not to be taken as limiting the invention
EXAMPLE 1 β-Galactosidase (β -Gal) Staining
Cells were washed in PBS, fixed for 3-5 minutes at room temperature in 2% formaldehyde and 0 2% glutaraldehyde (or m 3% formaldehyde alone), washed, and incubated at 37°C in fresh senescence-associated β-Gal (SA-β-Gal) staining solution (1 mg/ml 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-ιndolyl β-D-galactoside (X-Gal), 20 mg/ml dimethylformamide,
40 mM citπc acid/ sodium phosphate, pH 6 0, 5 mM potassium ferrocyamde, 5 mM potassium ferπcyamde, 150 mM NaCl, 2 mM MgCl Staining was evident following 2-4 hours of incubation and maximal staining was reached after in 12-16 hours To detect lysosomal β-Gal, the staining solution was prepared with citric acid/sodium phosphate at pH 4 0 (Baselga et al , 1999, Proceedings of AACR NCI EORTC International Conference,
Abstract 98)
EXAMPLE 2 Quantitation of Protein Expression bv Computer-Aided Image Analysis The expression of proteins associated with senescence or apoptosis are quantitated by image analysis using a suitable pπmary antibody (such as Ab-2 for p53, or Ab-1 for WAF1, HSP60, or caspase 3), secondary antibody (such as rabbit anti-mouse IgG), and tertiary ABC complex Tertiary ABC complexes are visualized by treating the sections with diaminobemzidme (DAB) stain under appropπate conditions In a second step, the tissue is counterstained with another optical enhancement factor, preferably ethyl green The resulting preparation has green nuclei with varying degrees of brown diammobenzidme (DAB) precipitate localized to the nuclei (and indicating the level of expression of p53, p21, pl6, WAF1 , HSP60, or caspase-3 protein) Although a staining technique using peroxidase and ethyl green is exemplary, other stains and optical enhancement factors are also suitable (such as alkaline phosphatase coupled with a specific chromagen such as Fast Red or Fast Green) Spectral studies have shown that the ethyl green stain offers good spectral separation from the DAB precipitate of the immunoperoxidase technique such that different features of the image can be readily separated by filteπng at two different wavelengths This allows the image to be digitized into two separate images, one in which all the cell nuclei are optically enhanced (ethyl green or Fast Green) and one in which only those tissue areas with receptor staining (DAB) are optically enhanced In a prefeπed embodiment, the images can be separated by a 600 nanometer (red) filter to produce an image of the counterstained area and a 500 nanometer (green) filter to produce an image of the tissue areas staining with the DAB precipitate
To further differentiate those areas, an interactive threshold setting technique can be used in which an operator visualizing the images can set a boundary on the areas under consideration When the boundaries are set, the images are formed by eliminating all parts of the image that are below the threshold in optical density A threshold is set for the first image, and a second threshold is set for the second image
The image processing method then consists of first forming the mask image of the tissues under consideration with the red filter This mask image is stored and another image for expressed protein quantification is then acquired by using the green filtered version of the same image Using the filters m combination allows for the optical enhancement of those areas of the tissue mask where tissue components are stained with DAB (which are darkened) and those tissue components having only the green counterstam (which are lightened) An image analysis can then be performed using only those areas of the image that are stained and which are withm the mask The amount of target protein is then quantitated by statistical analysis of the differences between the two images Also, the proportion or percentage of total tissue area stained may be readily calculated, as the area stained above an antibody threshold level in the second image Red and green filters are suitable for practice of the invention For SA-β-Gal, a green filter (500 ran) is used to determine the total cytoplasmic area stained with red eosin and compared with the blue area stained for SA-β-Gal (600 run) as determined using a red filter This implementation shows a convenient and advantageous method for discriminating between two areas having counterstammg It is recognized that there are vaπous other staining or optical enhancement methods and filteπng methods which can be used to optically enhance one particular area or feature over another cell feature (such as Fast green and eosin) The specific examples provided herein are suggestive of other equivalents for visualization of cell nuclei containing expressed p53, WAF1 protein, and SA-β-Gal
Following visualization of nuclei containing p53 protein or WAF1 protein, the percentage of such cells in tissue derived from patients after treatment may be compared to the percentage of such cells in untreated tissue
From these compaπsons, the potential effectiveness of a putative therapeutic or chemopreventive agent against the cancer may be determined Specifically, if there is a greater percentage of cells expressing p53, WAF1, SA-β-Gal, HSP60, or caspase 3 in the treated portion of the sample than there is in the untreated portion of the sample, then the therapeutic agent used in the treatment will be predicted to be potentially an effective agent for treating the cancer Conversely, if there is a substantially equal percentage of cells expressing SA-β-Gal, p53, WAF1, HSP60, or caspase 3 in both the treated and untreated portions of the sample, or there is less protein expression in the treated portion of the sample, then the putative therapeutic agent will not be predicted to be effective for treatment of the cancer
U S Patent Nos 5,252,487 and 5,288,477, incorporated herein by reference, disclose one method of quantitating DNA and protein
EXAMPLE 3
Response to Doxorubicin in Breast Cancer Cell Lines
Cellular changes are induced by treatment with moderate doses of doxorubicm and Taxol m breast tumor-derived human cell lines MCF7 cells were treated for 2-3 days with 50 nM doxorubicm or Taxol (doses that induce growth inhibition and cellular death as measured by flow cytometry; as described by, e.g., Dolbeare et al, 1983, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 80:5573-77) and then were stained for SA-β-Gal expression 10-1 1 days after release from the drug. The results of this treatment on the formation of sub-Gi fraction and the SA-β-GaL phenotype are shown in Figures 1A-1B and 2A-2C. Taxol-induced apoptosis is evident by the hypodiploid peak in the flow cytometry histogram, whereas doxorubicin treatment (and treatment with the monoclonal antibody Herceptin™) resulted in senescence and blocks at G- , G2, and G2M as seen in SA-β-Gal+ cells having the morphological features of senescence (Figures 2A-2C and Tables I and II).
EXAMPLE 4
Quantitation of SA-β-Gal Expression Following Treatment with Herceptin™
Frozen tumor sections were fixed and then stained for SA-β-Gal expression. SA-β- Gaf cells were quantitated using bright-field microscopy and image analysis. Tissues were obtained from a patient receiving only Herceptin™. The first needle biopsy was obtained from the metastatic disease before initiation of Herceptin™ therapy. On day 1 the patient received 4mg/lg.v Herceptin™ for 10 minutes. A second biopsy was taken on day 2, 24 hours after the patient received a second Herceptin™ treatment. A third biopsy was taken on day 14, 24 hours after the patient received a third dose of Herceptin™. The results of SA-β- Gal quantitation are shown in Figures 3A-3C and Table II.
EXAMPLE 5 Quantitation of p21WΛF1 Expression Following Treatment with Doxorubicin MCF7 cells were treated for 3 days with doxorubicin and then stained for p53 and p2jCipι/wAFi eXpression Cells were cultured, stained, and analyzed as described above for SA-β-Gal using appropriate antibodies. The results of p53 and p2iCIP1/WAF1 quantitation are shown in Table III.
EXAMPLE 6 Quantitation of p21 AF1 Expression in Individuals Following Chemotherapy Tissue samples from twenty breast cancer patients was analyzed for p21 expression by image analysis before and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Experiments were performed by the Imperial Cancer Research Fund (ICRF; Oxford University, U.K.). The results of this analysis show marked differences in tissue samples collected before and after treatment (Table IV). It should be understood that the foregoing disclosure emphasizes certain specific embodiments of the invention and that all modifications or alternatives equivalent thereto are within the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.
Table I
Percentage of Cells Expressing SA-β-Gal Cells
Figure imgf000014_0001
Table II Percentage of Cells Expressing SA-β-Gal in Patient Tissue After Herceptin Treatment
Figure imgf000014_0002
Table III
Expression of p53 and p21CIP1ΛVAF, in MCF7 Cells
Treated for 3 days with Doxorubicin
Cells stained for
Treatment Cells stained for p53 2I CIPIΛVAFI
(% Cells) (% Cells)
Φ 14.43 ± 6 10.61 ± 4 DOX 23.93 + 7 50.81 ± 6 Table IV
Twenty Breast Cancer Patients Analyzed by Image Analysis Before and After Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy
P21 P21+
Before treatment 16 4
After treatment 7 13

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1 A method for determining a response to administration of a chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent to an individual, compnsmg
(a) collecting a first tissue or cell sample from the individual before exposing the individual to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent,
(b) collecting a second tissue or cell sample from the individual after exposing the individual to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent,
(c) immunohistochemically staining the first and second tissue or cell samples using a detectably-labeled antibody directed against a biological marker associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation,
(d) measuπng the optical density of the stained cells as in step (c), wherem the stained cells are illuminated with light having a wavelength absorbed by the stain,
(e) determining whether expression of the biological marker associated with senescence, apoptosis or terminal differentiation was increased following exposure to the chemotherapeutic or chemopreventive agent
2 The method of claim 1, wherein the detectable label is a chromagen or a fluoraphore
3 The method of claim 2, wherein the biological marker is p21, p27, pi 6, TGF- β, or SA-β-Gal
4 The method of claim 1, wherem the amount of biological marker protein is determined by ELISA assay
5 The method of claim 1 , wherein optical density of the stained cells is performed by image analysis
6 The method of claim 5, wherem image analysis is performed by splitting a signal compnsmg the optical density of the stained biological sample into a multiplicity of signals that are processed using optical filters having different absorption and transmittance properties, so that each signal is specific for one of a multiplicity of stams used to stam the cells m the biological sample
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